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E-raamat: Three-Participant Constructions in English: A functional-cognitive approach to caused relations

(University of Leuven)
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This study aims to give a systematic and comprehensive description of the constructions involved in three important types of alternation: the locative alternation, which is by far the most researched of the three, the image impression alternation and the material/product alternation. The author looks at the constructions as part of alternation, but also looks beyond the alternations, and analyzes and describes the constructions in their own right. They are analyzed as three-participant constructions with relational complements, construing causation of the three main subtypes of relations, namely intensive, circumstantial and possessive relations. Particular attention is paid to the concept of holicity, to the status of the prepositional phrase, and to collocational properties, which play a key role in the decision as to which alternate should be regarded as the unmarked one within its construction paradigm. The approach taken is inspired by systemic functional grammar and can broadly be characterized as cognitive-functional.
Acknowledgement ix
Introduction 1(1)
The constructions
1(3)
A functional-cognitive approach
4(6)
Methodology
10(4)
Outline
14(2)
State of the Art
16(25)
The partitive/holistie approach: did John ever finish the job?
17(6)
Textual explanations
23(4)
Lexicalist-formalist approaches
27(12)
Levin and Rappaport: Lexical Conceptual Structures
29(3)
Pinker: constraints and narrow conflation classes
32(4)
Tenny: an aspectual approach
36(3)
Conclusion
39(2)
Textual Dimensions
41(33)
The notion of relative topicality
43(4)
Relative topicality as motivation for the alternations
47(22)
Identifiability of nominal referents
47(7)
Analysis of corpus data
54(7)
A structural analysis of information distribution
61(4)
Analysis of corpus data
65(4)
Interpretation and conclusion
69(5)
Holicity and Partivity
74(31)
The Location
76(8)
The relation between Location and PrepP
76(2)
The relation between Location and NG: holicity (?)
78(6)
The Locatum
84(19)
Holicity for the Locatum: quantity
84(4)
Holicity/partivity and definiteness
88(6)
A quantificational approach
94(9)
Conclusion
103(2)
Process and Participants
105(51)
Participants and circumstances
105(23)
Formal tests
108(5)
Semantic arguments
113(7)
The syntagmatic relations: Langacker's dependence model
120(7)
Conclusion
127(1)
The roles
128(16)
The Location
129(2)
The Locatum
131(6)
The Image
137(4)
Material and Product
141(3)
The Process
144(10)
Constructionally determined polysemy
145(5)
A dialectically motivated relation
150(4)
Conclusion
154(2)
A Relational Analysis
156(35)
The relational domain: from semiosis to possession, from identification to attribution
157(23)
The intensive subdomain: semiosis
160(2)
Intensive identification
162(2)
Intensive attribution
164(3)
Circumstantials and possessives
167(1)
Attribution and identification
167(3)
The semiosis-possession cline
170(10)
Caused relations
180(9)
Caused intensives and possessives
181(3)
A caused relational continuum
184(5)
Conclusion
189(2)
The Material/Product Constructions
191(28)
The semiotic type: instantiation and realization models
192(14)
Indefinite Products
193(3)
Definite Products
196(7)
Alternation and reversibility
203(2)
Interim conclusion
205(1)
The part/whole type
206(10)
Part/whole semantics: a discussion
206(5)
Alternation
211(5)
Conclusion
216(3)
The Image Impression and Locative Constructions
219(28)
Locative constructions as caused circumstantial relational configurations
220(4)
Variants and markedness
224(13)
A quantitative approach
224(9)
Collocations and lexical selection restrictions
233(4)
The locative alternation and agnation
237(7)
Conclusion
244(3)
Summary and Conclusion 247(10)
Reference List 257(10)
Index 267